June 30, 2007

Tree

 

 

 

Tree, 20070630, HTML & JPEG, 500 x 350 pixels (image used without permission)

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 10:14 AM

June 29, 2007

Rock

 

 

 

Rock, 20070629, HTML & JPEG, 500 x 350 pixels (image used without permission)

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 12:38 AM

June 28, 2007

Tree

 

 

 

Tree, 20070628, HTML & JPEG, 500 x 350 pixels (image used without permission)

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 12:25 AM

June 27, 2007

Rock

 

 

 

Rock, 20070627, HTML & JPEG, 500 x 350 pixels (image used without permission)

& JPEG

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 07:32 AM

June 26, 2007

Tree

 

 

 

Tree, 20070626, HTML & JPEG, 500 x 350 pixels (image used without permission)

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 05:30 PM

June 25, 2007

Rock

 

 

 

Rock, 20070625, HTML & JPEG, 500 x 350 pixels (image used without permission)

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 10:05 PM

June 24, 2007

Tree

 

 

 

Tree, 20070624, HTML & JPEG, 500 x 350 pixels (image used without permission)

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 09:04 PM

June 23, 2007

Rock

 

 

 

Rock, 20070623, HTML & JPEG, 500 x 350 pixels (image used without permission)

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 09:34 PM

June 22, 2007

Tree

 

 

 

Tree, 20070621, HTML & JPEG, 500 x 350 pixels (image used without permission)

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 12:48 AM

June 21, 2007

Rock

 

 

 

Rock, 20070621, HTML & JPEG, 500 x 350 pixels (image used without permission)

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 11:58 PM

Art Radio interview archive

 

 

[Update: my interview with Eva can now be downloaded mp3, approx. 13mb.]

The interview I did with Eva Lake yesterday can be listened to at The Art Radio page at Voice America Women's Network, or it can be downloaded as an MP3.

An hour goes by quickly. Eva did her homework and did a great job. I had thought in advance about all of the things I wanted to describe and explain. Most of that wasn't touched. Immediately after the interview I thought about all of the things I wanted to talk about: the other artists I wanted to mention: the reasons behind how I am using the HTML work to make objects now; ideas about narrative, sequence, time, chronology, accumulation. I wanted to mention Giotto, Sienese painting, Jacob Lawrence (!), Thomas Nozwkoski's collaborative book Autobiography with Judy Linn, Jennifer Bartlett's Rhapsody, and Mary Heilman. Sorry I didn't get to that. It was a good experience anyway, and I'm grateful for the opportunity to talk. Many thanks to Eva.

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 03:07 PM

June 20, 2007

Tree

 

 

 

Tree, 20070620, HTML & JPEG, 500 x 350 pixels (image used without permission)

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 07:15 AM

June 19, 2007

Rock

 

 

 

Rock, 20070619, HTML & JPEG, 500 x 350 pixels (image used without permission)

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 07:22 AM

Art Radio

 

 

Art Radio guest list

Listen to Art Radio

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 07:00 AM

June 18, 2007

Tree

 

 

 

Tree, 20070618, HTML & JPEG, 500 x 350 pixels (image used without permission)

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 12:32 AM

June 17, 2007

Rock

 

 

 

Rock, 20070617, HTML & JPEG, 500 x 350 pixels (image used without permission)

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 11:24 PM

June 16, 2007

Tree

 

 

 

Tree, 20070616, HTML & JPEG, 500 x 350 pixels (image used without permission)

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 11:59 PM

June 15, 2007

Figure

 

 

 

Figure, 20070615, HTML, 350 x 250 pixels

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 07:43 AM

June 14, 2007

Head

 

 

 

Head, 20070614, HTML, 350 x 250 pixels

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 07:58 AM

June 13, 2007

Figure

 

 

 

Figure, 20070613, HTML, 350 x 250 pixels

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 07:18 AM

The Art World

 

 

[Update: my interview with Eva can now be downloaded mp3, approx. 13mb.]

Eva Lake's new internet radio show, The Art World, is now up and running. I will be interviewed next Wednesday, June 20, details below: The Art World Podcast

The Art World is an interview-based talk radio show covering visual art in America, hosted by Eva Lake and produced by Voice America on the women's network. Before Art World, Lake hosted Artstar Radio in Portland, Oregon. This show is similar but no longer regionally based. It includes interviews with artists, critics and other art writers, curators, collectors and other people who work in the art world.

All shows are live on Wednesdays at 3PM (PST) and allow listeners to call in with comments and questions during the hour at 866.472.5788.

Live broadcast and show archives are accessible at this link. Direct links to each archived interview are posted below.

Brief details about the guests are posted here, but more information about the guests, plus links to their works, will be posted in the blog at this address.

Here is the summer schedule:

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 12:12 AM

June 12, 2007

Head

 

 

 

Head, 20070612, HTML, 350 x 250 pixels

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 04:38 PM

The struggling online artists

 

 

From the Irish Times, June 11, 2007:

 

The struggling online artists

Convergence Culture: The web remains unconquered territory for mass brands, writes Haydn Shaughnessy.

The visual landscape is predominantly an amalgamation of brand images. Car-makers such as Mercedes, BMW, Volkswagen, Alfa Romeo; the premium watches of Piaget; images of sun-brightened vacations; coffee. If we laid them end-to-end we'd have the Bayeux Tapestry of how we spend our incomes. I was surprised to read this week that in the UK coffee accounts for a third of all domestic tap water consumed. Presumably the rest is used in the bath.

Starbucks and Nescafé, Matey and Palmolive. Brands offer a way into a lifestyle and a way of expressing aspiration. What is most interesting about them, though, is that they are a visual statement rather than a textual one. Go back a hundred years and newspapers, then the primary means of communication, carried few images. An image-free Irish Times is now unimaginable. Newspapers have to print magazines in order to attract brand advertising in an environment marked by the competitiveness of the visual.

That means we are blessed with abundant imagery. Images, not sounds or words, communicate brand values and mark the chronology of the day and week, from breakfast TV to newspapers to daytime TV and the weekend supplements. Here is the gallery that most of us constantly attend.

So, there are two things that are happening because of the world wide web. The first is that brand advertising is under threat. Brands demand the highest standards of reproduction for their images; the web cannot provide this.

The second is that a select group of artists is exploring images within the constraints of the web to stunning effect, reminding careful observers that the limitations of an art form can be as powerful as the broad liberty to stun that comes with huge advertising budgets.

Chris Ashley is an interesting artist because he confines himself to the limitations of the world wide web and produces an extraordinary variety of images as he tests this form to the limit. Ashley, who works from Berkeley in California, gave up art until five years ago when he began a visual blog.

Every day since he has posted a new variation on his chosen theme - what can an artist create out of the scripting code used to design web pages? While blogging remains largely associated with the written word, its use as a visual medium is on the increase and here in Ireland we now have a handful of exceptional photobloggers, from Donncha O Caoimh and Ryan Whalley in Cork, to Gingerpixel in Dublin and North Atlantic Skyline in the west.

I know of no artist, though, who has taken the disciplines of blogging as literally as Ashley and few photobloggers come close to creating a new discipline for the internet in the way Ashley is doing for art.

Also an accomplished painter, Ashley has devoted a part of every single day in the past five years to producing one new image in web code. That's now almost 2,000 variations on the limited potential of a screen-sized image, making use of a blocky medium that does not like curves and offers an extremely limited range of colours.

The significance of Ashley's work is that he produces extraordinary imagery in what is fast becoming the most watched medium, the web. At the same time, major branded goods companies are struggling to transfer the high-cost imagery that served them well on television screens, outdoor hoardings and magazines, to the scaled-down environment of the internet. The fact is, we now know that the web as a medium has the potential to amaze. The problem is that the brand culture has not been able to unlock it.

It is a reminder too that art and brands have a relationship that goes largely unexplored. Over the past 30 years conceptual art has had to contend with the power of brand imagery stealing its show, as well as with the power of the software industry to influence behaviour and to initiate change. Under our noses, brands as images, and software as a mechanism for altering human behaviour, have exerted the influence we once associated only with politics and conflict.

Right now the influence of the brand and the coder is also shifting. Nobody is creating imagery in this new medium on the scale and of the quality of Ashley, whether you count the better photobloggers or major brands. What is most engaging about Ashley's practice is there in the work of the more important bloggers: a sense that to communicate is a duty, the need for discipline not to shirk it; an acceptance of limitations and a willingness to explore them creatively; communication before money.

In the past 30 years we've experienced a shift in curatorial power over imagery from the museum and gallery to the brand, and a shift in the power to change behaviour from politics and our moral guardians to the people who code applications. At least in this one small corner of the web, the balance of power is shifting back to artists who are constructing a moral framework in which to produce works of beauty using, of all things, computer code.

Chris Ashley's work can be seen at www.chrisashley.net

Irish photoblogs: www.rymus.net, www.inphotos.org, www.gingerpixel.com, www.monasette.com/blog

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 07:12 AM

June 11, 2007

Figure

 

 

 

Figure, 20070611, HTML, 350 x 250 pixels

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 12:57 PM

D.K. Rowe: First Thursday, Portland

 

 

Dispatches from the floating city..and First Thursday

Posted by D.K. Row June 07, 2007 10:52AM

 

Chambers: I'm not exactly sure how Oakland-based artist Chris Ashley creates his drawings using HTML -- hypertext markup language. But they look pretty cool. By allowing HTML to determine the shape and outcome of his drawings, Ashley's ultimately embracing the art of chance and serendipity. The results are graphic bands of colors that bear some resemblance to the minimalist and hard-edged abstract works of the '50s and '60s, as well as Op Art. Ashley has assembled 365 of these drawings -- a year's worth of work -- into one extended installation along the gallery's wall. (207 S.W. Pine St. #102)

 

Right: detail of Jukebox (Sunshine of Your Love), 20070214, HTML, 440 x 320 pixels

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 12:35 PM

Chambers Gallery installation

 

 

WYSIWYG
Chambers Gallery
June 6 - July 14 2007

Above: Lassen & Tuolumne, 2007, inkjet print on transparency between acrylic, 11 x 8.5 inches each

 

Above: Jukebox, 2007, 28 inkjet prints, 55 x 59.5 inches

 

Above left to right: Percolating, Cinematic Dataculture & Zen Arcade, 2007, inkjet print on transparency between acrylic, 11 x 8.5 inches each; above right: 365, 2006, 365 inkjet prints, 132 x 263.5 inches

 

Above: Himmel und Masse, 2007, 28 inkjet prints, 55 x 59.5 inches


All photos Ann McConville

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 12:27 PM

Portland Art: First Thursday Picks June 2007

 

 

Portland Art: First Thursday Picks June 2007

 

This month, Chambers Fine Art is exhibiting the work of Chris Ashley. WYSIWYG is a series of inkjet prints of HTML drawings, all of which are "drawn" entirely with HTML code. The drawings are made up of hand-coded tables with colored columns and rows, and are part of a daily journal project on Ashley's weblog.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 12:10 PM

June 10, 2007

Head

 

 

 

Head, 20070610, HTML, 350 x 250 pixels

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 08:34 AM

Fifty

 

 

 

Fifty, 20070610, HTML, 450 x 600 pixels

49, 48, 47, 46, 45

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 08:04 AM

June 09, 2007

Figure

 

 

 

Figure, 20070609, HTML, 350 x 250 pixels

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 10:12 AM

June 08, 2007

Head

 

 

 

Head, 20070608, HTML, 350 x 250 pixels

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 11:59 PM

June 07, 2007

Figure

 

 

 

Figure, 20070607, HTML, 350 x 250 pixels

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 11:59 PM

June 06, 2007

Head

 

 

 

Head, 20070606, HTML, 350 x 250 pixels

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 11:59 PM

June 05, 2007

Figure

 

 

 

Figure, 20070605, HTML, 350 x 250 pixels

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 12:02 AM

Luxe, Calme et Volupté

 

 

Luxe, Calme et Volupté
Curated by Joanne Mattera
June 7 - July 14, 2007
Opening Thursday, June 7, 6-9 pm
Reception for curator and artists:
Saturday, June 16, 7-9 pm.

Marcia Wood Gallery
263 Walker Street SW
Atlanta, GA 30313

404.827.0030
http://www.marciawoodgallery.com/

 

 

David Ambrose
Chris Ashley
Frances Barth
Julie Gross
Rainer Gross
Heather Hutchinson
Julie Karabenick
Timothy McDowell
Tim McFarlane
Maureen Mullarkey
Rose Olson
Robert Sagerman
Donna Sharrett
Venske & Spanle

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 12:01 AM

June 04, 2007

Head

 

 

 

Head, 20070604, HTML, 350 x 250 pixels

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 01:22 AM

WYSIWYG @ Chambers, Portland

 

 

CHAMBERS

207 S.W. Pine Street No. 102

Portland, Oregon 97204

503.227.9398

chambersgallery.org


Presents


WYSIWYG

HTML Drawings by


CHRIS ASHLEY


JUNE 6 -- JULY 14 2007


RECEPTION FOR THE ARTIST:

THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 5:30 - 8:30PM


Also open first Thursday in July, 5:30 to 8:30PM


Right: Jukebox 1-28 (detail), 2007, inkjet prints


 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 12:32 AM

June 03, 2007

Figure

 

 

 

Figure, 20070603, HTML, 350 x 250 pixels

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 12:55 PM

June 02, 2007

Head

 

 

 

Head, 20070602, HTML, 350 x 250 pixels

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 04:17 PM

June 01, 2007

Figure

 

 

 

Figure, 20070601, HTML, 350 x 250 pixels

 

 

 

 

Posted by chrisashley at 11:59 PM